• bi_tux@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    I still find the fact that the ultra auth-left instance hexbear.net is the most republican instance on the entire fediverse extremely amusing

      • bi_tux@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        we don’t know for a fact, but I’ve spent some time on a lot of instances and they were the only ones telling me to not vote harris and instead vote trump

    • RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      It’s always matter of time before some radical nationalists and radical socialists talk to each other, come to the realization that they actually have a lot in common and then decide to work together in a single nationalist socialist organisation. The inevitable backstabbing comes later.

      Edit: I had written national instead of nationalist.

  • Soup@lemmy.cafe
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    8 hours ago

    Saying this is a no-brainer is essentially in and of itself, a no-brainer. But yet, here we are, frustratingly attempting to educate leftists and undecided people on the dangers of “protest voting” and how cataclysmically dangerous it is to assume that you know better without ever seeming to possess the ability to simply just prove it.

    We have the receipts. We know damn well what is going to happen if Trump is allowed to win.

    And if you think you’re teaching someone a lesson with your withheld vote, I’ve got news for you-

    A LOT of people are going to be hurt. And the ones you think it will be, the ones you’d want it to be- won’t be counted among them.

    I promise you this.

    • Moah@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 hours ago

      Couldn’t tell democrats to try and please their demographics instead of republicans. No, the left vote is “owed” to democrats no matter how much they turn their back on those voters. And then y’all wonder why people are disillusioned with politics.

      • Soup@lemmy.cafe
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        4 hours ago

        Well, when your entire political view is based on unsubstantiated rhetoric, I’d imagine it’s probably pretty easy to arrive at such a conclusion.

        No vote is owed, my friend. That’s just something you all seem to like to tell yourself so that your smug arrogance has a semblance of purpose.

        And trust me when I say this:

        No one is wondering why you’re disillusioned with politics… disillusion- of course, being the keyword here.

        Enjoy watching from the docks while rest of us pull this ship into port without your help.

        • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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          22 minutes ago

          “I’m only willing to help if we’re pulling in a perfect condition ship that has a dream cabin hand crafted for each of us. Yes I know this ship will never exist, but I stand by my statement”

    • Dragon "Rider"(drag)@lemmy.nz
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      6 hours ago

      If both sides are the same, then drag thinks the “both sides” must be the Democrats and the Leninists. Because those are the two groups who say they’re leftists but do little to help others. Drag agrees with the non voting leninists on a factual basis, and also thinks they’re complete fools on a practical basis.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I wish Walz did better at calling out ALL of Vance’s bullshit. Vance said, “we as republicans need to do better to earn your trust on bodily autonomy.”

    It doesn’t take much effort to say bullshit. If you want to have more trust, then don’t get rid of the only thing protecting women’s bodies!

  • dalekcaan@lemm.ee
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    14 hours ago

    Is it just my imagination, or did that weasely fuck spend the entire time Walz was talking trying to do a Jim Halpert look at the camera?

  • RadicalEagle@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    I don’t think the audience Vance’s message is supposed to resonate with cares about being fact-checked, or facts in general.

    Trump doesn’t care if he’s being fact-checked because facts don’t matter to him, and his voters have the same outlook.

    • sp3tr4l@lemmy.zip
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      16 hours ago

      It’s actually worse.

      The core MAGA people are utterly convinced that ‘fact checking’ is literally the moderators lying to prevent Republicans from saying what is actually true.

      They are way, way, waaaaay down the rabbit hole of the lugenpresse, I mean fake news, that basically any time the figures they adore/worship are ever fact checked, well actually that is evidence of a vast liberal media conspiracy against them.

      They actively despise fact checking, and when it happens, this triggers their conspiracism harder.

      The reason why Vance made a show of crying about fact checking was partly due to personal anger/embarrassment/whatever, but the other part is that he knows that complaining about it is appealing to core Trump voters.

      • jj4211@lemmy.world
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        38 minutes ago

        I’d say it’s even worse than that. Part of the culture on the right is that "yeah, it’s a lie but that’s fine. Even proving they lie beyond a shadow of a doubt doesn’t dissuade the core, because they have been conditioned to take lies in stride, so long as it agrees with them.

        You have Vance going on and saying the lies are necessary because unless they lie about Haitians and paint them as barbaric savages then people will fair to recognize them as the barbaric savages that everyone knows “those people” really are, even if the facts don’t support that. That maybe they can’t accurately state how they are savages or they can’t support it, it “sounds right” and that’s good enough because surely they are up to something like that, because they are “those people”.

        You have people in their camp like Scott Adams spinning things as “directionally true”, again, they may not be actually true, but common sense tells everyone Haitians are bad people, so it’s good enough.

        Speaking of common sense, Vance said during the debate that experts are explicitly people to disregard and to follow that “common sense”. Expertise, research, honoring the facts, all these are bad things because “common sense” knows better (so long as “common sense” agrees with whatever Trump camp feels, if your “common sense” disagrees, well then you don’t have common sense or you are somehow evil).

        Like the one “outright lie” they caught Walz in, that 35 years ago he was in Hong Kong in August instead of June, Walz seemed genuinely ashamed about that pretty mild scenario. Meanwhile Vance just effortlessly carries on without a hint of caring about being called out on anything.

      • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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        16 hours ago

        And the fact that Lügenpresse has even come up at all is freaking wild. That’s something which should send a chill down the spine of anyone with even a whiff of understanding of modern history.

        That they’re down the rabbit hole about it should be impossible. The whole idea should have been political suicide. I take it as evidence of the extreme control years and years of Republican propaganda has on its constituents. They not only vote against their own interests, but they now actively stand against democracy. Absolutely insane.

        • sp3tr4l@lemmy.zip
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          15 hours ago

          For clarity: Vance did not literally say lugenpresse or fake news, he just performatively complained about fact checking.

          I am the one saying lugenpresse.

          …Because one of the many fascist elements of Trump’s cult is his repeated refrain of ‘fake news’, which is exactly the same tactic as Hitler and many other fascists have used in their rise to power.

          Again, Vance did not literally say lugenpresse at the debate.

          Personal Aside

          But uh yeah, in general, widespread American conservative adoption of fascist culture and talking points is not surprising to me.

          These people it appeals to the most are narcissistic assholes who have largely failed in life, and are fueled by raging against their inability to achieve the American Dream™ … and then that rage is directed toward anything that conservative hate mongers can blame for that failure.

          I grew up in a religious, conservative household and had to do a considerable amount of research and investigation to learn it was all bullshit, then learn how to argue to be able to refute it, and then expend basically all my wit, energy and resources to escape these toxic people.

          Incurious people who grow up in that setting often never really have any inkling to challenge any of it and are basically always ostracized, negged or disowned for doing so.

          They just get more and more indoctrinated, culminating in basically QAnon/MAGA worldview: Just make up a narrative that makes you superior righteous and truly knowledgeable , and all your ideological enemies extremely brainwashed at best, literal, actual demons (reptillians?) at worst.

          My dad went from making me listen to Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage every time we were in the car together, to, last time I spoke with him, attempting to convince me that Tom Hank’s son actually was a pedophile who raped and ate babies for their adrenochrome.

          The… more and more time I spend away from my family, the more and more I talk, either in person or online, with other people, the … more and more I realize just how absurdly insane my life experience has been, that I can best describe myself as a traumatized survivor of it.

          Its taken me around two decades to escape the constant physical, mental and financial trauma inflicted upon me by the narcissistic, moronic hypocrites that raised me, taken me two decades to undo all the brainwashing.

          Its a cult. American conservatism is a cult of rage and hatred.

          That’s why it isn’t surprising to me that it finally went mask off with Trump. It’s always been there seething beneath the surface of begrudging civility.

          You just have to have come from it, been born into it, and then escaped, to know how bad it has been, and still is.

          • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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            12 hours ago

            It is not a stretch to say that Lügenpresse is a key talking point of the Trump platform. Was the exact word said at the debate? No. Has Trump (and potentially Vance) called the press liars when it comes to the Trump campaign? Yes, on many occasions.

            We shouldn’t split hairs about semantics in the face of fascism.

            • pumpkinseedoil@sh.itjust.works
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              14 hours ago

              Ah ty, I thought they meant that the republicans said it, which - even when considering how surreal some of their takes are - would have surprised me.

              Btw while I’m at it: I never got how half of the USA can ignore all these things and vote for Trump, but this article captured it very well (got recommended to me on Lemmy)

              https://www.cracked.com/blog/6-reasons-trumps-rise-that-no-one-talks-about

              To all US-americans out there: please remember that the only realistic way to stop Trump is by voting for Harris.

              • samus12345@lemmy.world
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                13 hours ago

                The parallels with Weimar Germany are stark. It Happened Here.

                I should be getting my mail-in ballot pretty soon.

                Unfortunately, since I’m in California my presidential vote won’t matter, but I’ll vote for whoever the most progressive candidate is for every position, as always. It’s often two Democrats, so I can’t just go by the letter by their name to know who that is.

                • Omgpwnies@lemmy.world
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                  12 hours ago

                  but, like, also make sure you’re not spoiling a more popular Dem if they’re at any risk of losing to a GOP

      • captainWhatsHisName@lemm.ee
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        16 hours ago

        This is exactly what they are saying on a few conservative subreddits I saw today. That the moderators fact checked him about migrants, then when he tried to explain some detail that explained everything they cut his mic.

        As if Vance hasn’t famously been lying about the topic for weeks and endangering a whole community.

    • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      15 hours ago

      JD Vance actually said that it doesn’t matter because, “It’s how it feels.”

      This mirrors almost exactly what the Alex Jones staff said during depositions. It didn’t matter if they had facts. What mattered is that the alternative felt true and they would report on that.

      • Infynis@midwest.social
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        15 hours ago

        I think Lindsey Graham said the same thing after the RNC back in 2016. It’s been going on forever, but that’s the first time I remember one of them saying it out loud. Paraphrasing, “I’m a politician. You can have your facts, I’ll take people’s feelings every time.”

        • CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          12 hours ago

          I mean, giving him a very very large margin of doubt, there’s a part of this that makes sense. Like you’re dealing with people and you need to understand their feelings.

          BUT if those feelings are so far divorced from facts that they think that immigrants are eating pets, you stand up to your constituents with heart and concern and tell them why they are wrong.

      • vividspecter@lemm.ee
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        12 hours ago

        Kellyanne Conway, senior member of the 2016 Trump admin, wanted people to look into Trump’s heart for the truth:

        You can’t give him the benefit of the doubt on this and he’s telling you what was in his heart, you always want to go with what’s come out of his mouth rather than look at what’s in his heart

    • Itdidnttrickledown@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Facts are a variable to some. These types are always trying to bend things around and back peddling when they encounter a situation that they can’t lie their way out of. Fact checking is to them unfair since their made up facts/lies should be okay as far as they are concerned.

  • stoly@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Sadly, both will resonate equally with their bases. Although I think they Walz had a better performance, I don’t think this debate changed anything.

  • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I’m no fan of Vance, but if you’re going to put Walz’s office in there, you have to include it for both of them.

  • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago

    I believe we need to abolish the presidency in the near future and distribute the powers to the House and Senate. Powers of government to the House and Powers of State to the Senate, with some fudging for checks and balances, like house passes laws and Senate has to intervene to veto them with some qualified majority rules like the EU has.

    I believe this has to be done because it’s pretty clear that a system with a single powerful leader inherently puts all the strain and division of the nation into that leader, especially when there’s no recourse when public sentiment turns against that leader except for voting them out, if that’s even an option to begin with.

    A dual-parliamentary system with some restructuring of the House and Senate would go a LONG way in venting a significant amount of the pressure that has built up under our elected leaders as of late.

    Also replace the singular supreme court with a sortitionate bench that’s drawn randomly for each case that rises to federal jurisdiction to shoot jurisdiction shopping dead.

    • xJREB@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      But who would lead the executive branch then and how would you ensure that they are reasonably separated from the legislative branch?

      • jj4211@lemmy.world
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        33 minutes ago

        I would suggest that abolishing it is impractical, however it needs to be reigned in a lot. There are a few circumstances that call for the decisiveness of a strong singular authority, but not many. These “executive orders” have been nuts and shouldn’t be such a routine thing.

      • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        5 hours ago

        There would be no independent executive branch, the very concept inevitably endangers democratic systems by creating a person with a lot of power who inherently is going to view any disagreement of course of action from the people’s representatives as an obstacle to be gotten around.

        Or have you missed all the headlines about the over reliance reliance on executive orders over the past decade and change? Not to mention how the fiat veto was never intended but instead the result of Andrew Jackson just deciding he didn’t have to give congress a reason why their laws were being treated with the same energy as shit that was at a minimum arguably unconstitutional up to that point.

        The independent executive is a leach that parasitically sucks power away from the elected representatives of the people, and imposes “checks” on their powers that not only are entirely unneeded, but actively endanger the health of the republic.

        Everywhere that’s tried american style democracy since the US formed has collapsed in dramatic fashion, everywhere else that’s gone with a parliamentary system has at worst had periods of endangerment, mostly caused by a parliamentary leader trying to get the powers of an american style president, gestures wildly at Orban and Erdogan

  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    16 hours ago

    To be fair, if we think about the bigger picture and not just abortion, unless US States disappear then people’s rights will continue to vary quite a bit depending on their geographical location in the same country, including their body autonomy…

    • BigPotato@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      But the federal government is allowed to say “Alright, this is the baseline for rights. Go from there.”

        • jj4211@lemmy.world
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          29 minutes ago

          I think the argument is there’s a baseline that should not be up for debate. But some states should be able to offer different beyond the baseline. For example, presume that the federal government lacks the will to provide universal health care, it still should be quite reasonable for states to provide it, should they feel they have the ability and the will.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            8 minutes ago

            And then it comes back to what I said, unless States cease to exist and everything is administered at what is currently the federal level, rights will vary based on geographical location. I’m just pointing out that the language used doesn’t work based on that.

    • stoly@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      States rights have always been about allowing one group of people to have the power to oppress another group within a state and without federal intervention. It’s why Democrats tend to focus on federal policy and Republicans are obsessed with things like states or parental rights.

      Picking up your point, I believe that reform should extend to the point of dissolving states and creating provinces instead, all under central government like nearly every country on earth.

    • _bcron@midwest.social
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      10 hours ago

      It’s helpful to have a sort of pyramid in government for the sake of balancing the workload (someone managing foreign policy shouldn’t be bothered to give a shit about a pothole in Utah) but what we could do is not burden states with these kinds of things and kick it up to the federal level. For a while it was, and it was stable and consistent, but now it’s not and that’s the mess

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        8 hours ago

        So long as States are allowed to provide more than the Federal minimum you’re still opening the door to having people with different rights based on their geographical location though…

        Let’s say healthcare is now 100% public and managed or forced on States by the federal government but medication isn’t covered, you could have one State saying “alright, that’s dumb, we will handle medication coverage then” and now living right across the State border means that you’re paying for insulin or private coverage while your friend in the next town over doesn’t know how much either of those things cost because it’s all paid by taxes…

        I’m using that example because something similar happened in Canada (one province decided to create its own medication insurance policy while it was an handled by the private sector in the other provinces).u